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PROGRAM FOLIO
JANUARY 2-15,1961
Page 2
KPFA Program Folio
BERKELEY
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502 Tioga Building, 2020 Milvia Street, Berkeley-TH. 1-5886.
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THE ART STORE— Everything for the Artist, Printmaker, Draftsman and Craftsman, and
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ASSOCIATIONS
IF YOU BELIEVE that funerals should not be a luxury,
if you disapprove of ostentatious display at time of
death, then you, like our 4000 adult members, would
approve of the BAY AREA FUNERAL SOCIETY. The
BAFS is a non-profit association established in 1955
as a public education service, and to help families
arrange sensible funerals of dignified simplicity. For
further information write to 1414 University Ave.,
Berkeley 2 (Berkeley Co-op Credit Union Bldg.). Or
phone, TH 3-6784, Ext. 36. Office hours, Tue., Wed.,
Thur., 10-2.
BOOKS
BOOKS LOCATED-FREE SEARCH By GERARD'S
Out-of-print, "Unavailable" books our specialty. Let
us save you time and effort. Write: GERARD'S, Box
710, Berkeley 1.
THE GLOZERS - Booksellers
Used scholarly books — cook books, etc.
2013 Milvia TH 5-1081
Tues.-Sat.- 1 1 :00 - 5:30
PERSONAL BOOKPLATES. Select designs, typefaces.
Surprisingly inexpensive. Brochure, NORMANDIE HOUSE,
2610 West Eighth, Los Angeles.
10TH SUCCESSFUL YEAR. Search Service for out-of-print
books. Book Service, 2210 Fillmore St., S. F. 15. "Ask
Any Librarian."
STILL AVAILABLE: "Foundations of U. S. China Policy,"
transcript (in paperback book) of the now famous
radio program broadcast over KPFA in early 1959.
Participants include George E. Taylor, Robert North,
Robert Scalapino, James D. White, Conrad Brandt,
Peter Odegard, Louis Wasserman, Inis Claude, James
P. Warburg, John K. Fairbank, Edgar Snow, Hans
Morgenthau, Paul Baran, Carey McWilliams, Chou Ming
Li. Edited by Urban Whitaker. Send $1.00 plus 4c state
sales tax to KPFA, 2207 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley 4.
CARPENTER
Experienced Carpenter. Small jobs preferred. Hourly
rates. Reynolds, TH 3-2365.
(Continued on Page 10)
PROGRAM
FOLIO
A
Published bi-weekly by Radio Station KPFA, 2207 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley 4,
California. Telephone THornwall 8-6767. Available only to subscribers to the KPFA
Listener Fund. KPFA is owned and operated by Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit
corporation.
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Listeners in certain parts of the East Bay who have difficulty receiving KPFA clearly
may hear all of these programs on KPFB at 89.3 mc.
VOL. ELEVEN, No. 20 •
BROADCAST HOURS: 7 a.m. -Midnight, Monday through Friday. 9 a.m. -Midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Dates
of future rebroadcasts appear in BOLD FACE, caps and parentheses. Dates of original broadcasts appear in
light face and in parentheses. Numbers in parentheses after record listings indicate approximate time.
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In Southern California: KPFK, 5636 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles 38. Telephone HOIIywood 7-7183.
In New York: WBAI, 30 East 39th St., N. Y. 16. Telephone OXford 7-2288.
MONDAY, January 2
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
SCHUBERT Sonata No. 5, for Violin and Piano,
A major, Op. 162
(Szigeti, Hess) (Columbia 4717) (25)
BEETHOVEN Septet, Eb major, Op. 20
(Vienna Ens) (London 1191) (36)
BLOCH Quartet No. 1, B Minor
(Roth Quartet) (Mercury 50110) (50)
BRAHMS Trio for Piano, Violin and Horn, Eb major,
. Op. 40
(Jones, Schneider, Horszowski) (Columbia 4892)
(30)
MESSIAEN La Merle Noir
(Gazzeloni, Mercenier) (Festival) (7)
9:45 NEW YORK COMMENTARY: from WBAI.
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: a novel set in
the Moluccas, by Maria Dermout, a Dutch woman
who began writing in her 60's. Read by Jean Rubin.
10:30 HIPPOLYTE ET ARICIE: excerpts from the opera
by Rameau, performed by French soloists, chorus
and orchestra, conducted by Roger Desormiere.
(London 50034)
11:30 GAMAL ABDEL NASSER: Robert St. John dis-
cusses the Egyptian president with Byron Bryant.
(Dec. 29)
12:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Dec. 28)
1:00 WHAT SORT OF REVOLUTION? Stanford Profes-
sor of Economics Paul Baran discusses his stay in
Cuba. (Dec. 21)
2:20 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT (Dec. 29)
MOZART String Quintet, G minor, K. 516 (30)
Four Pieces from the Glogauer Songbook (16)
TELEMANN Quartet for Three Winds and Continuo,
D minor (16)
3:30 THE DOOMSDAY BOOK: The Man Who Cannot
Die. The first of eight episodes in a serial by J.
MacLaren-Ross. (BBC)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"Stories for Young People" chosen and read by
Kathy McCreary.
"The Princess and Curdie"— Virginia Maynard con-
tinues her reading of this story by George Mac-
Donald.
"Kim"— Sheldon Rudolph continues his reading of
the Kipling novel.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 SYMPHONY PREVIEW: This week's concert by
the San Francisco Symphony.
WAGNER Overture to "The Flying Dutchman"
(Philharmonia— Klemperer) (Angel 35875) (10)
HAYDN Toy Symphony
(Orch-Weingartner) (Columbia 4776) (20)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 5, C minor, Op. 67
. (Lamoureux Orch— Markevitch) (Epic 3659) (31)
6:45 NEWS: Agar Jaicks.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Father Eugene Boyle. (JAN. 3)
7:15 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: a report and
interpretation by William Mandel. (JAN. 3)
7:30 BANTU HOMELANDS: Christian W. Prinsloo,
Chief Information Officer of the South African
Ministries of Bantu Administration and Development
of Education, discusses the "homelands" created
for the African populations, apartheid itself and
criticisms of it with Jon Donald.
8:00 THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL: Spanish Renaissance
music, performed by the Victoria de los Angeles
Ensemble. (BBC)
8:30 HISPANIC-AMERICAN
Spanish and Portuguese
duced by the staff of the
American and Luso-Brazilian
REPORT: developments in
speaking countries. Pro-
Institute of Hispanic-
Studies, Stanford Uni-
versity, Ronald Hilton, Director.
9:00 REPORT ON MUSIC: criticism and reviews by
Glenn Glasow.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD MARIJUANA SMOKER: In
a discussion with Robert H. Macdonald, San Diego
County Probation Department, a seventeen-year-old
boy tells how he got the "weed," why he smoked
it, and its efefcts.
10:50 DAS LIED VON DER ERDE: the symphonic song
cycle by Gustav Mahler, performed by Murray Dickie,
tenor, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, baritone, and the
Philharmonia Orchestra, conducted by Paul Kletzki.
(Angel 35858/9)
TUESDAY, January 3
7:00 PIANO CONCERT
BACH Partita No. 5, G major
(Gould) (SB 1366-67) (13)
BEETHOVEN Diabelli Variations, Op. 120
(Shure) (Epic 3382) (53)
WEBER Sonata No. 4, E minor, Op. 70
(Fleisher) (Epic 3675) (24)
PROKOFIEV Ten Pieces from "Cinderella," Op. 97
(Pressler) (MGM 3192) (22)
KRENEK Sonata No. 3, Op. 92, No. 4
(Gould) (Columbia 5336) (20)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Father Eugene Boyle. (Jan. 2)
9:45 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William Man-
del. (Jan. 2)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues her reading of Dermout's novel.
10:30 CHAMBER MUSIC (Dec. 30)
BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 9, for Violin and Piano,
A major, Op. 47 (34)
SCHUBERT Quartet No. 6, D major (27)
PROKOFIEV Sonata for Flute and Piano, D major,
Op. 94 (22)
MOZART Divertimento No. 3, Bb major, K. 439b (23)
MOREL Cassation for Winds (9)
12:30 THE WRITER AND HIS ART: the first of two
talks by the Chicago critic, Elder Olson, recorded
at Grinnell College.
1:30 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT (Dec. 21)
MOZART Serenade No. 9, D major, K. 320 (36)
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 2, Bb major, Op. 19
(30)
Page 4
KPFA Program Folio
POULENC Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra
(21)
SATIE Socrate, a Symphonic Drama (50)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"With a Song and a Dance" with Natalie Lessinger
and her young friends.
"Stories Told from Memory" by Josephine Gardner.
(KPFA Archives)
"Kim"— read by Sheldon Rudolph.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 CHAMBER MUSIC
MOZART String Quartet, Bb major, K. 589
(Netherlands Quartet) (Epic 3100) (25)
BRAHMS Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano, A
major, Op. 100
(Szigeti, Horszowski) (Mercury 50210) (20)
CARTER Eight Etudes and a Fantasy
(NY Wind Ens) (CRI-118) (24)
6:45 NEWS: Hanna Pitkin.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Steve Murdock. (JAN. 4)
7:15 ON CAMPUS POLITICS: Burton White, chairman
of the Bay Area Committee to AboTisTi HUAC.
7:30 MAN, THE UNIVERSE, ETC.: "Not a Bus, but
a Tram?" The free will puzzle is discussed by Dr.
Wallace Matson.
8:00 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (JAN. 5)
Singers who died during the past year (first of
four programs):
Eduard Habich, bartione (1882-1960) (recording of
1928)
WAGNER Tristan und Isolde: Kurwenals Tod (Ivar
Andresen, etc.)
Giovanni Inghilleri, baritone (1895-1959) (recordings
of 1929-1945)
VERDI Aida: Quest' assisa ch'io vesto (Dusolina
Giannini, Aureliano Pertile, etc.); Ciel! mio padre!
(Giannini)
PUCCINI II tabarro: Perche non m'ami piu? (Emma
Tegani); Nulla! Silenzio
8:30 THE HINDU DANCE: the first of two programs
in which the Indian dancer Ishvani (now Mrs. Edwin
Hamilton) describes the history, forms, symbolism
and techniques of Hindu dance to Colin Edwards
and Bari Rolfe, the San Francisco dancer and teacher
of modern dance.
9:00 OUR INSIDIOUS GENIAL SOCIETY: Frank Gib-
ney, former Associate Editor of Time and Senior
Editor of Newsweek, now a staff writer on Life,
discusses his new book "The Operators" with
Byron Bryant.
9:15 THE FIFTH PROVINCE: Rev. Michael Scott, who
since 1946 has petitioned the U. N. on behalf of
the African population of South West Africa, tells
Jon Donald about the country's history, living condi-
tions of the native people, the political dangers
of a racist policy, and the attempts to force the
government to comply with its mandate obligations
or relinquish its control.
9:45 SPECIAL REPORT: a close look at important
news by Trevor Thomas or Brian Roper at KPFK.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. The early
jazz guitarist, Eddie Lang, Part II. (JAN. 4)
10:45 THE GOON SHOW: Sellers & Co., in "King Solo-
mon's Mines."
11:15 SONGS BY HAYDN: performed by Dietrich
Fischer-Dieskau and Gerald Moore. (Electrola 90988)
WEDNESDAY, January 4
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HAYDN Symphony No. 94, G major
(Royal Phil-Beecham) (Capitol 7127) (24)
DVORAK Slavonic Dances, Op. 46
(Czech Phil— Talich) (Parliament 121) (37)
MAHLER Symphony No. 9
(Vienna Phil-Walter) (RCA LCT-6015) (85)
9:45 COMMENTARY: Steve Murdock. (Jan. 3)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues her reading of Dermout's novel.
10:30 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT (Dec. 26)
SCHUBERT Quartet No. 14, D minor (35)
MARAIS Suite No. 4, D major (26)
BRAHMS Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 65 (20)
WOLF Twelve Songs from the Spanish Songbook (30)
12:45 THE WRITER AND HIS ART: the second of two
lectures by Elder Olson, Chicago critic.
1:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood. (Jan. 3)
2:00 HOW TO BUY A CAR: Salesman Ed Richmond
gives Brian Roper the inside story on sales "tricks"
and deceptions. (Dec. 20)
2:30 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (Jan. 1)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"Tell-Me-Again-Tale" with Stella Toogood.
From now on, this half hour will be used for pro-
grams for older children. Today, "The Laundry,"
a fable written and read by John Bovington.
Youth Has Its Say: "Family Relationships"— the first
of a series of discussions between young people
from the Orient and the Occident. (Radio UNESCO)
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 MUSIC BY SCHUBERT
Serenade for Alto, Women's Chorus and Piano,
Op. 135
Psalm 23 for Women's Chorus and Piano, Op. 132
(Eustrati, Berlin Choir— Lehmann) (Decca 144)
(6) (6)
Sonata, Bb major, Op. Posth. (Haskil, piano) (Epic
3031) (38)
German Mass, F major
(Choir, Berlin Phil-Forster) (33)
6:45 NEWS: David Bentel.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller. (JAN. 5)
7:15 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: letters and informa-
tion about KPFA, conducted by Pacifica's president,
Harold Winkler. (JAN. 8)
7:30 RUSSIA'S NEW SEVEN-YEAR PLAN: Henry F.
McCusker, economist.
7:45 LESSONS FROM THE CONGO: James S. Cole-
man, Director, African Studies Center and Prof, of
Political Science at UCLA, talks about his recent
visit to West Africa.
8:45 CAMUS MEMORIAL PROGRAM: in commemora-
tion of his death one year ago. The author is heard
reading from "L' Ete: La Mer au Plus Pres," fol-
lowed by Fred Haines reading his Nobel Prize
acceptance speech, and Myron Winick reading the
essay, "Return to Tpasa." Prepared and introduced
by Richard Vernier.
9:45 CONSUMER PROTECTION: recent court decisions
affecting consumers, reported by John Hopkins.
(JAN. 5)
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 GROWTH OF THE NOVEL: ninth in a series by
Paul West, Associate Professor of English, Memorial
University, St. John, Newfoundland.
10:45 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (JAN. 9)
11:45 MORAVIAN FOLK SONGS: performed by folk
musicians. (Artia 153).
THURSDAY, January 5
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
BEETHOVEN String Quartet, F major, Op. 59, No. 1
(Busch Quartet) (Columbia 4155) (42)
SPOHR Octet, E major, Op. 32
(Vienna Octet) (London 1610) (27)
SCHUMANN String Quartet, A minor, Op. 41, No. 1
(Curtis Quartet) (Westminster 5166) (25)
RAVEL Introduction and Allegro
(Hollywood Ens) (Capitol 8304) (15)
IVES Second String Quartet
(Walden Quartet) (Period 501) (23)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller. (Jan. 4)
9:45 CONSUMER PROTECTION: John Hopkins. (Jan. 4)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues her reading of Maria Dermout's novel.
10:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Dec. 23)
BACH Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, G major (17)
HANDEL Concerto Grosso, Bb major, Op. No. 7 (17)
STAMITZ Concerto for Clarinet, Strings and Continuo,
Bb major (18)
BRAHMS Symphony No. 2, D major, Op. 73 (38)
HARTMANN Symphony No. 6 (24)
12:30 DEFENSE, THE BOMB AND DISARMAMENT:
Herman Kahn, Physics Department of the Rand
Corporation, discusses security, war and the balance
of terror. (Dec. 29)
1:30 MUSIC FOR WINDS (Dec. 20)
MILHAUD Suite for Band (10)
STRAVINSKY Symphony for Wind Instruments W
REED La Fiesta Mexicana (18)
2:15 ISSUES OF MAN AND HIS ENVIRONMENT:
questions of individual and group morafTty in
science and medicine. Sir George Pickering, H. J.
Muller, Ralph Gerard, C. P. Snow, and Warren
Weaver of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. (Dec. 19)
3:00 EARLY HISTORY OF PALMOLIVE SOAP: from
"My Life in Advertising," by Claude C. Hopkins.
Read by Evan Yoes.
3:30 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (Jan. 3)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"The Princess and Curdie"— the next part read by
Virginia Maynard.
"Forest Lore"— Beginning, once again, a series on
animal life to be conducted by Josh Barkin,
Assistant Naturalist of the East Bay Regional
Park District.
More of "Kim" read by Sheldon Rudolph.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 MUSIC BY MOUSSORGSKY: in original form and
in orchestral transcription.
Pictures at an Exhibition
(Richter, piano) (Artia 154) (33)
Pictures at an Exhibition (Arr. Ravel)
(London Sym— Sargent) (Everest 6053) (34)
6:45 NEWS: Chris Koch.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Sidney Roger. (JAN. 6)
7:15 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CALENDAR OF EVENTS:
reported by Charles Susskind. (JAN. 6)
7:30 MUSIC BY PALESTRINA: performed by the Pro
Musica Sacra. (BBC)
8:00 THE POLITICAL MAN: another in the series by
Dr. Seymour Lipset, Professor of Sociology at Yale.
8:30 A FIRED PROFESSOR PROTESTS: Dr. Leo F.
Koch, University of Illinois professor discharged
last June because of his published letter about
premarital relations, talks with Byron Bryant.
9:00 A WORK OF ART AND KASHTANKA: two Chek-
hov short stories dramatized by Bill Butler, read by
Shaun Gordon, Edward Wawszkiewicz, Stan Nielson
and Bill Butler. (KPFA Archives)
9:45 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MISSILE: The Splash
Called Polaris. Ed Cray and Frank McGuire continue
their close look at America's missile program.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster, Part I.
10:45 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchenco.
11:15 PIANO CONCERT: short works by Scarlatti,
Rameau, Couperin, Poulenc and Debussy, performed
by Maria Varro. (Festival)
KPFA Program Folio
Page 5
12:30 DISARMAMENT - CONDITIONS AND CONSE-
QUENCES: Dr. Hans Morgenthau. (Dec. 23)
1:15 MUSIC FOR PIANO AND PERCUSSION (Dec. 30)
PERSICHETTI Concerto for Piano Four Hands, Op. 56
(19)
CHAVEZ Toccata for Percussion (9)
MATTON Concerto for Two Pianos and Percussion
(17)
2:10 ART AND ARTISTS OF THE BAY AREA: Albert
Zoc, sculptor, interviews Glenn Wessels, painter and
teacher at the University of California.
3:00 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip Elwood.
(Jan. 5)
3:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (Jan. 1)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Judy Brundin in on vacation in England during
January but will continue "Judy Reads" when
she returns.
"Activity Songs" sung by Marcia Berman of KPFK.
A story for "After Christmas."
"The Ugly Duckling" is adapted from the story by
Hans Christian Andersen by the Atlas Theatre
Company. The music used is by Grieg.
"What's Going On?"
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 SYMPHONY PREVIEW: most of the music which
will be performed by the Oakland Symphony Or-
chestra next week.
BRAHMS Tragic Overture, Op. 81
(Orch-Walter) (Columbia 5573) (12)
BEETHOVEN Concerto for Piano No. 5, Eb major,
Op. 73
(Schnabel, Philharmonia-Galliera) (Odeon 83015)
(40)
COPLAND Variations for Orchestra
(Louisville Orch-Whitney) (LOU) (22)
6:45 NEWS: Lloyd Reinhart.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Victor Ferkiss.
7:15 ART, GANDHI, REVOLUTION AND MAMMON:
Byron Bryant interviews Beniamino Bufano, whose
statue "St. Francis of Assisi" has been in the
news recently. (KPFA Archives)
8:00 FAMOUS TRIALS: the Ireland's Eye Murder, a
reconstruction of the famous trial written by Denis
Johnston. An artist of questionable moral character,
an inexperienced medical student and an eminent
pathologist all seem to be involved in the case.
(BBC)
9:00 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: last-minute program arri-
vals of Jopical interest.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 CHINA REVISITED: Maud Russel, for many years
a YMCA worker in China and now editor of the
Far East Reporter, tells William C. Berges of her
recent visit to China.
11:05 THEODORE BIKEL AT HOME: a visit with the
actor-folksinger and his guests. (JAN. 10)
12:05 'ROUND MIDNIGHT: Jazz with Jim Cano.
FRIDAY, January 6
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HANDEL Concerto No. 4 for Organ and Orchestra,
Op. 4
(Reinberger, Prague Orch— Neumann) (Artia 104)
(24)
RAVEL Le Tombeau de Couperin
(Philadelphia Orch-Ormandy)(Columbia 5569)(20)
BRUCKNER Symphony No. 5, Bb major
(Bavarian Sym-Jochum) (DGG 300) (90)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Sidney Roger. (Jan. 5)
9:45 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Charles Susskind.
(Jan. 5)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues her reading of Maria Dermout's novel.
10:30 CHAMBER MUSIC (Dec. 20)
HAYDN Divertimenti, No. 37, G major, No. 44,
D major (23)
BACH English Suite No. 1, A major (21)
MILHAUD The Four Seasons (45)
PISTON Sonatina for Violin and Harpsichord (21)
SATURDAY, January 7
9:00 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT
K.P.E. BACH Trio, C major
(Zimbler Ens) (Boston 404) (10)
SCHUBERT String Quartet No. 15, G major
(Endres Quartet) (Vox VBX-4) (44)
COPLAND Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson
(Lipton, Copland) (Columbia 5106) (30)
FINNEY String Quartet No. 6, E major
(Stanley Quartet) (CRI-116) (24)
11:00 PHILOSOPHY, EAST AND WEST: Alan Watts.
(Jan. 1)
11:30 THE PRESIDENT'S PRESS CONFERENCE: via air-
mail from Washington.
12:00 FROM HERE TO SUNDAY: folksongs with Ed
Cray.
1:30 THE ROGUE OF PUBLISHERS' ROW: Edward
Uhlan, president of one of the largest "vanity"
publishing houses (Exposition Press), talks with
Byron Bryant about the business methods of "big
time" American publishing.
Page 6
KPFA Program Folio
2:00 EARLY ENGLISH INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC: from
the 16th and 17th centuries. Commentary by Anne
Kitto.
3:00 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bachman interviews im-
portant film personalities.
3:30 ENCAMPMENT FOR CITIZENSHIP: Saal D. Lesser,
Executive Director, tells Elsa Knight Thompson about
some outstanding events of the past year and plans
for future ones under the auspices of EFC.
4:00 CRITICISM AND CHAOS: a rebroadcast of the
first of the 1960 Sather Lectures given by Prof.
H. D. F. Kitto. (Nov. 11)
5:15 CONCERTO CONCERT
BACH Piano Concerto No. 1, D minor
(Richter, Czech Phil-Anosov) (Artia 123) (25)
MOZART Flute Concerto No. 1, G major, K. 313
(Barwahser, Vienna Sym— Pritchard) (Epic 3033)
(24)
SCHUMANN Concerto for Four Horns, F major,
Op. 86
(Soloists, Russian Orch-Gauk) (Monitor 2123)
(25)
WEBERN Concerto for Nine Instruments, Op. 24
(Ens-Craft) (Columbia KL5021) (6)
6:45 NEWS: Fred Schott.
7:00 NEW YORK COMMENTARY: from WBAI.
7:15 CHILDHOOD HOME AND HAUNTS OF MARK
TWAIN: Colin Edwards visits Hannibal, Missouri, to
discover the real places and incidents which appear
in "Tom Sawyer" and "Huckleberry Finn." Produced
for CBC.
8:00 BRENDAN BEHAN OFF THE RECORD: in a re-
markable flow of the English language (and some
French) the unfettered Irish author and playwright
delivers himself on nationalism, homosexuality, the
H-Bomb, his own work, Sean O'Casey, U. S. food,
Samuel Beckett, James Joyce, communism, and
Brendan Behan. He is interviewed by Tom F. Driver.
9:00 THE ARCHIVE SERIES: music before 1800, re-
leased by Deutsche Grammaphon-Decca.
FRESCOBALDI Music for Harpsichord
(Neumeyer) (Archive 3054) (26)
HANDEL Zadok the Priest
(Chorus, Orch-Jones) (Archive 3133) (7)
Music of the Minstrels: Seventeen Dances
(Pro Musica Antiqua) (Archive 3002) (18)
10:00 TRAINING OUR DIPLOMATS: Myron L. Koenig,
Associate Dean of the Foreign Service Institute,
talks with Elsa Knight Thompson and Gene Marine
about in-service education of our "working level"
diplomats and the foreign service generally.
11:00 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL: plenty of foreign
sounds with Gert Chiarito's in-service education of
folk singers.
12:00 'ROUND MIDNIGHT: jazz, talk and over-modu-
lation with Jim Cano.
SUNDAY, January 8
9:00 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT
BRAHMS Symphony No. 3, F major, Op. 90
(Orch-Walter) (Columbia 5574) (33)
BEETHOVEN Missa Solemnis, D major, Op. 123
(Schwarzkopf, Gedda, Ludwig, Zaccaria, Phil-
harmonia-Von Karajan) (Angel 3595) (85)
11:15 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler.
(Jan. 4)
11:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (JAN. 13)
12:00 JAZZ REVIEW: Philip F. Elwood.
1:30 HIROSHIMA REVISITED: In 1958 the Reynolds
family and a Japanese crewman sailed the yacht
Phoenix into the Pacific nuclear testing grounds.
Mrs. Barbara Reynolds tells Trevor Thomas about
the voyage, her husband's arrest, conviction and
current appeal, and of the night people of Hiro-
shima, where the Reynolds now live aboard the
Phoenix.
2:00 L'ORFEO: Monteverdi's "dramma per musica"
edited and conducted by August Wenzinger, with
Helmut Krebs as Orfeo, Hanni Mack-Cosack as
Euridice and Margot Guillaume as La Musica, with
an ensemble of ancient instruments. (Archive 3035/6)
4:00 THE U. N. DEBATES DISARMAMENT: last Novem-
ber Krishna Menon of India introduced into the
U. N. Political Committee, on behalf of several
neutral nations, a disarmament resolution. Robert
Schutz of Lobby for Peace has produced and nar-
rated this edited recording of introduction and sub-
sequent debate, including Menon, James Wadsworth
of the U. S., and Valerian Zorin of the U.S.S.R.
5:30 BARON MUENCHHAUSEN AND ACOUSTICS: H.
V. Muenchhausen who held the title of Baron un-
til he came to the U. S., tells Colin Edwards of
CBC atfOut his famous ancestor, the effect of tall
storytelling fame on the lives of his family, and
about his own present field of activity: acoustics.
6:00 NEWS REVIEW: Bill Plosser.
6:15 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (JAN. 11)
VIVALDI Concerto in C, No. 17
(Sherman, Zimbler Ens) (Vic) (11)
GALILEI Contrappunto for two lutes, Fuga for
three lutes
(Carisch) (5)
BONPORTI Sonata in G minor, Op. 1 No. 3
(Redditi, Ceradini, Caruana) (Carisch) (7)
P. QUAGLIATI "Madre divina"
(Sons, di Milano Piccolo Coro) (Carisch) (1)
P. QUAGLIATI "Apre il suo verde seno"
(Souzay, bar.) (Lon) (1)
LOCATELLI Concerto in D, Op. 3, No. 1
(Lautenbacher, Orch-Kehr) (Vox) (23)
CLEMENTI Sonata in B minor, No. 2
(Balsam, piano) (17)
SINIGAGLIA Danza Piemontese
(Boston Pops) (Vic) (8)
7:45 COMMENTARY: Robert Schutz. (JAN. 9)
8:00 PHILOSOPHY, EAST AND WEST: Alan Watts.
(JAN. 14)
8:30 AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC ACTION: an-
other in the series produced for Pacifica by the
ADA in Washington.
9:00 SONGS BY HUGO WOLF: from the "Spanish
Songbook," performed by Irmgard Seefried, so-
prano, Eberhard Waechter, baritone, and Erik
Werba, piano. (DGG 18591)
9:30 LOVE: beginning our rebroadcasts of the series
by Dr. C. S. Lewis, with five programs of one
half hour each.
10:00 IF THIS BE REASON: another in the monthly
series produced by Leo Huberman and Paul Sweezy,
editors of The Monthly Review.
10:30 THE CHANGELING: a play by the Elizabethan
dramatist, Thomas Middleton, produced by Raymon
Raikes. (BBC)
MONDAY, January 9
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HAYDN Symphony No. 104, D major
(Lamoureux Orch-Markevitch) (Epic 3725) (26)
MOZART Piano, Concerto No. 27, Bb major, K. 595
(Henkemans, Vienna Sym— Pritchard) (Epic 3117)
(28)
MENDELSSOHN Piano Concerto No. 1, G minor,
Op. 25
(Gilels, Orch-Kondrashin) (CRLP 191) (20)
STRAVINSKY Agon
(Orch-Stravinsky) (Columbia 5215) (20)
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Scheherazade, Op. 35
(Czech Phil-Chalabala) (Parliament 103) (47)
9:45 COMMENTARY: Robert Schutz. (Jan. 8)
10:00 TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin continues
her reading of the novel by Dermout.
10:30 CHAMBER MUSIC (Dec. 28)
HAYDN Octet for Winds, F major (20)
SCHUBERT Trio No. 2 for Piano and Strings, Eb
major, Op. 100 (40)
FLOTHUIS String Quartet, Op. 44 (20)
12:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Jan. 4)
1:00 THE PLUNDERED CONTINENT: Paul Johnson's
article from the Monthly Review, read by Gene
Marine. (Dec. 26)
1:45 KEYBOARD CONCERT (Jan. 1)
LUEBECK Three Organ Pieces (15)
BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No. 11, Bb major, Op.
22 (20)
BRAHMS Sixteen Waltzes, Op. 39 (24)
MOUSSORGSKY Pictures at an Exhibition (30)
3:30 THE DOOMSDAY BOOK: The Man Who Cannot
Die. The second part of the serial by J. MacLaren-
Ross.
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"Stories for Young People" read by Kathy McCreary.
"The Princess and Curdie"— another part of this
story by George MacDonald is read by Virginia
Maynard.
"Kim"— Sheldon Rudolph continues his reading of
the novel by Rudyard Kipling.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 SYMPHONY PREVIEW: this week's concert by
the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra.
SCHUBERT Overture to "Rosamunde," Op. 26
(Concertgebouw-Szell) (Epic 3433) (10)
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 2, Bb major, Op. 19
(Cor de Groot, Vienna Sym— van Otterloo) (Epic
3434) (30)
HINDEMITH Symphony, Mathis der Maler
(Berlin Phil-Hindemith) (Decca 9819) (24)
6:45 NEWS: Agar Jaicks.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Caspar Weinberger. (JAN. 10)
7:15 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: a report and
interpretation by William Mandel. (JAN. 10)
7:30 EDINBURGH FESTIVAL: Spanish Renaissance
music, performed by the Ars Musicae Ensemble.
(BBC)
8:00 SIGNPOSTS FOR THE ATOMIC AGE: produced
by Richie Colder, courtesy of the Stanford Archive
of Recorded Sound. Tonight: "The Underworld."
8:15 THE U. S. "PREDICAMENT" IN THE MIDDLE
EAST: Dr. Fayez Sayegh, visiting professor in poli-
tical science and philosophy at Stanford, pulls no
punches speaking before NAJDA (American Women
for the Middle East) in Berkeley.
9:15 REPORT ON MUSIC: criticism and review by
Glenn Glasow.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 SONG OF MYSELF: Walt Whitman's poem, read
by Orson Welles. (BBC)
11:15 CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MUSIC
BABBITT Composition for Twelve Instruments
(Ens-Travis) (Festival) (9)
KIM Dialogues for Piano and Orchestra
(Harsanyi, Orch-Kim) (Festival) (10)
CARTER Variations for Orchestra
(Louisville Sym— Whitney) (LOU-58-3) (20)
TUESDAY, January 10
7:00 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT
VERACINI Sonata No. 1, F major
(Sebastian, harmonica, Josi, harps.) (DDG 12015)
(12)
J. C. F. BACH Recitative and Aria from "Cassandra"
(Allen, Zimbler Ens) (Boston 405) (10)
MONTEVERDI II Ballo Delle Ingrate
(Deller Consort) (Vanguard 567) (50)
MENDELSSOHN Quartet No. 1, E major, Op. 12
(Fine Arts Quartet) (Mercury 10065) (24)
BLOCH Quintet for Piano and Strings
(Chigi Quintet) (London 382) (33)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Caspar Weinberger. (Jan. 9)
9:45 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William
Mandel. (Jan. 9)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues her reading of Dermout's novel.
10:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Dec. 19)
BEETHOVEN Violin Concerto, D major, Op. 61 (38)
BRAHMS Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra
A minor, Op. 120 (33)
GINASTERA Pampeana No. 3 (17)
KPFA Program Folio.
Page 7
12:00 THEODORE BIKEL AT HOME (Jan. 6)
1:00 LIFE IN SPACE: an address by Dr. Melvin Cal-
vin, of the U. C. Dept. of Chemistry and the
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory. (KPFA Archives)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT (Dec. 29)
RAMEAU Les Indes Galantes (25)
HAYDN Flute Concerto, D major (25)
SCHUBERT Symphony No. 2, Bb major (25)
STRAVINSKY The Rite of Spring (35)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"With a Song and a Dance" with Natalie Lessinger.
and her young friends.
"Stories Told from Memory" by Josephine Gardner
(KPFA Archives)
"Kim"— read by Sheldon Rudolph.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 CHAMBER MUSIC
J. S. BACH Suite for Lute No. 3, G minor
(Gerwig) (Archive 13022) (26)
J. C. BACH Quintet, F major
(Collegium Pro Arte) (London 50046) (12)
BERG Suite Lyrique
(Juilliard Quartet) (Festival) (34)
6:45 NEWS: Hanna Pitkin.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Russell Kirk. (JAN. 11)
7:15 ON CAMPUS POLITICS: Richard Chesney, Vice
Chairman of the Student Civil Liberties Union.
7:30 MAN, THE UNIVERSE, ETC.: homage to J. L.
Austin, by Dr. Wallace Matson. Fourth of several
talks on philosophy of the future, present and past.
8:00 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (JAN. 12)
Singers who died during the past year (second of
four programs):
Armand Tokatyan, tenor (1896-1960) (recordings of
• 924)
MASSENET Manon: Ah! fuyez, douce image
GOUNOD Faust: Salut! demeure
Hubert Marischka, tenor (1881-1959) (recordings of
1910)
LEHAR Das Fuerstenkind: Herbst und Fruehling; Ich
diene so gerne den Damen (Mizzi Guenther)
Sydney Granville, bass ( -1959) (recordings of
1923-1930)
SULLIVAN H.M.S. Pinafore: Fair moon,- Things are
seldom what they seem (Bertha Lewis)
SULLIVAN lolanthe: When all night long on sentry
go
8:30 THE HINDU DANCE: the second of two programs
in which the Indian dancer Ishvani (Mrs. Edwin
Hamilton) describes the history, forms, symbolism
and techniques of Hindu dance to Colin Edwards
and Bari Rolfe.
9:00 ALL-AMERICAN DINNER: Recently some 750
guests assembled to honor the House Un-American
Activities Committee and retiring member, Rep.
Donald L. Jackson. Outside, 120 students picketed
the event, billed as an "All-American Dinner."
Israel Feuer recorded some reactions of guests,
pickets and Mr. Jackson.
9:15 THE ANTI-WHITE MOVEMENT IN AFRICA: "Rac-
ial prejudice in reverse." Louis E. Lomax, author
of "The Reluctant African" (Harper's), talks with
Byron Bryant.
9:45 SPECIAL REPORT: a close look at important
news by Trevor Thomas or Brian Roper of KPFK.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. Tonight:
Empress of the Blues, Bessie Smith, part I. (JAN. 11)
10:45 THE GOON SHOW: Sellers, Secombe, Milligan
and "The Stolen Postman."
11:15 CATULLI CARMINA: the middle section of Carl
Orff's trilogy, "Trionfi— Trittico Teatrale." Perform-
ance is by soloists, choir and ensemble of the
Bavarian Radio, conducted by Eugen Jochum. (Decca
9824)
Page 8
KPFA Program Folio
WEDNESDAY, January 11
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
J. D. BACH Overture, D major
(Zimbler Ens) (Boston 403) (18)
WAGENSEIL Concerto for Cello, Strings, and Con-
tinuo, A major
(Mainardi, Munich Orch) (Archive 3110) (22)
BRAHMS Piano Concerto No. 2, Bb major, Op. 83
(Serkin, Philadelphia Orch— Ormandy) (Columbia
5491) (45)
COWELL Symphony No. 11
(Louisville Sym-Whitney) (LOU 545-2) (20)
BARTOK Concerto for Orchestra
(Orch-Lehel) (Festival) (37)
9:45 COMMENTARY: Russell Kirk. (Jan. 10)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues reading Dermout's novel.
10:30 CHAMBER MUSIC (Dec. 22)
MOZART Oboe Quartet, F major, K. 370 (17)
BACH Musical Offering (50)
BRAHMS Sonata No. 1, for Violin and Piano, G
major, Op. 78 (21)
SHOSTAKOVITCH Piano Quintet, Op. 57 (25)
HESSENBERG String Trio, Op. 48 (20)
1:00 PSYCHIATRY AND THE "DOUBLE-BIND" THEORY:
Gregory Bateson describes a new theory of mental
illness based on work with messages and communi-
cation. (Dec. 27)
1:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip Elwood. (Jan. 10)
2:00 THEATER IN CANADA: Desmond Scott, the Eng-
lish-born (former Old Vic) Director of the Manitoba
Theater Center in Winnipeg, talks with Colin D.
Edwards.
2:30 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (Jan. 8)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"Tell-Me-Again Tale" with Stella Toogood.
Youth Has Its Say: "Education"— second in a series
of discussions between young people from the
Orient and the Occident. (Radio UNESCO)
Stories from the Greeks: "Darius is chosen king."
(BBC transcription)
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 CHAMBER MUSIC
MOZART Quartet for Flute and Strings, G major,
K. 285a
(Barwahser, Netherlands Ens) (Epic 3368) (12)
BEETHOVEN Quartet No. 14, Cft minor
(Vegh Quartet) (HSQ-48) (36)
MENDELSSOHN Octet, Eb major, Op. 20
(Vienna Octet) (London 859) (30)
6:45 NEWS: David Bentel.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Herbert Hanley. (JAN. 12)
7:15 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: letters and informa-
tion about KPFA, with Pacifica's president, Harold
Winkler. (JAN. 15)
7:30 RUSSIA'S NEW SEVEN-YEAR PLAN: Donald G.
Rea.
7:45 ELECTRONIC MUSIC
MAXFIELD Fermentation (8)
MAYUZUMI Variation sur 7 (15)
8:15 JEWISH FOLKLORE: Lila Hassid with guest,
Cantor Simon G. Cohen.
8:45 THE LATIN AMERICAN LEFTS: problems of Latin
America, the ignorance of Norteamericaoos, and
the many faces of the South American Left come
under spirited discussion when Elsa Knight Thomp-
son and Gene Marine are joined by Robert D. Bar-
ton, Director of the Inter-American Department of
the Institute of International Education, George
Hall of the Creole Foundation of Caracas, Venezu-
ela, and Arturo Morales-Carrion, Undersecretary of
State of Puerto Rico.
9:45 SUPREME COURT DECISIONS: attorney Lawrence
Steinberg discusses recent important actions by the
high tribunal.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (JAN. 16)
11:15 DETTINGEN TE DEUM: by George Frederick
Handel. Performed by soloists, and the choir and
orchestra of the Netherlands Bach Society, con-
ducted by Anthon van der Horst. (Epic 3540)
THURSDAY, January 12
7:00 PIANO-VOCAL CONCERT
BACH Goldberg Variations
(Jones) (MLR 7073) (35)
DUFAY Five Sacred Songs
(Pro Musica Antiqua— Cape) (Archive 3003) (24)
BEETHOVEN Nine Songs
(Fischer-Dieskau, Klust) (HMV 1509) (30)
CHOPIN Sonata No. 2, Bb minor, Op. 35
(Novaes) (Vox 10940) (21)
SCHUMANN Nine Songs to Heine Poems
(Fischer-Dieskau, Klust) (HMV 525) (30)
B. WEBER Fantasia (Variations), Op. 25
(Masselos) (Epic 3567) (10)
9:45 COMMENTARY: Herbert Hanley. (Jan. 11)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues reading Dermout's novel.
10:30 MONTEVERDI'S L'ORFEO (Jan. 8)
12:30 THE STRUGGLE WITHIN: Oliver Tambo, Deputy
President of the African National Congress in South
Africa, and Vusumzi Make, Director of the Cairo
Office of the South African United Front, talk with
Jon Donald. (Jan. 1)
1:30 CHAMBER MUSIC (Dec. 28)
SCHUBERT Piano Quintet, A major, Op. 114 (45)
MOZART Adagio and Rondo, C minor, K. 617 (15)
BACH Suite No. 3 for Solo Cello, C major (22)
3:00 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (Jan. 10)
3:30 THE CHILDREN'S BOOK SAMPLER: Ellyn Beaty
discusses some old favorites.
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"The Princess and Curdie"— the next part read by
Virginia Maynard.
"Forest Lore," conducted by Josh Barkin.
"Kim"— more of this story by Kipling is read by
Sheldon Rudolph.
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 MUSIC BY HUNGARIAN COMPOSERS
DOHNANYI Sonata for Violin and Piano, Op. 21
(Michaelian, Hagopian) (MLR 7047) (20)
KODALY Summer Evening
(Ens-Winograd) (MGM 3631) (28)
BARTOK Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion
(Ens-Stokowski) (RCA 1721) (28)
6:45 NEWS: Chris Koch.
7:00 IN THE LAST ANALYSIS: another in the series
of monthly talks by Dr. Paul A. Baran, Prof, of
Economics at Stanford. (JAN. 13)
7:30 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CALENDAR OF EVENTS:
reported by Charles Susskind. (JAN. 13)
7:45 WHAT OCCURRED? The San Francisco City Hall
demonstrations of last spring are debated by Ed
Montgomery of the San Francisco Examiner, and
Burton White, chairman of the Bay Area Committee
to Abolish HUAC. Held at the U. C. Newman Club,
the debate goes into considerable detail about the
events of "Black Friday."
9:00 STRATFORD FESTIVAL, i960: Roy Harris conducts
the International String Congress Orchestra.
HARRIS Hymn and Fuguing Tune (4)
RIDOUT Two Etudes (11)
CASTRO Adios a Villa-Lobos (6)
CAMPOS-PARSI Rapsodia Elegiaca (11)
VILLA-LOBOS Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 (11)
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster, Part II.
10:45 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchenco.
11:15 THE STORY OF THE SIREN: by E. M. Forster,
read by Vivian Schaeffer.
11:35 SONGS OF A WAYFARER: four early songs by
Gustav Mahler, performed by Heinrich Schlusnus,
baritone and the Hessian Symphony conducted by
Winfried Zillig. (DGG 17097)
FRIDAY, January 13
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
BACH Sonata for Two Violins and Piano, C major
(D. & I. Oistrakh, Yampolsky) (Monitor 2005) (15)
MOZART Divertimento No. 15, Bb major, K. 287
(Vienna Ens) (London 1239) (42)
BEETHOVEN Sonata for Violin and Piano, Eb major,
Op. 12, No. 3
(Grumiaux, Haskil) (Epic 3488) (18)
STRAVINSKY The Soldier's Tale
(Ens-Carewe) (Everest 6017) (26)
SCHUMANN Quintet, Eb major
(Aller, Hollywood Quartet) (Capitol 8316) (29)
9:30 IN THE LAST ANALYSIS: Paul Baran. (Jan. 12)
10:00 THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS: Jean Rubin con-
tinues reading Dermout's novel.
10:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Charles Susskind. (Jan.
12)
10:45 MUSIC FOR CHAMBER ORCHESTRA (Dec. 26)
TELEMANN Concerto for Trumpet, Two Oboes and
Continuo, D major (14)
BACH Concerto No. 5 for Piano and Strings, F
minor (20)
SCHOENBERG Chamber Symphony, Eb major, Op.
9 (26)
12:00 MYSTICISM AND NATIONALISM IN MODERN
INDIAN THOUGHT: a talk by Stanley Ol Maron,
former philosophy lecturer at the University of
Dacca in East Pakistan.
12:50 TEN POEMS OF JOHN DONNE: read by Jean
Nicholas.
1:15 CHORAL CONCERT (Dec. 28)
LULLY Psalm 50 (23)
MAMIYA Composition for Mixed Chorus (16)
2:00 THE "MAD" MITFORDS-A FAMILY PORTRAIT:
Jessica Mitford talks about her eccentric family
portrayed in her book "Daughters and Rebels."
Miss Mitford, now Mrs. Robert Treuhaft of Oakland,
California, describes her ideological clashes with
her sisters Unity, a friend and devotee of Adolf
Hitler, and Diana, now wife of the British Fascist
leader, Sir Oswald Mosely, and gives word pictures
of the rest of her family. Recorded for CBC by
Colin D. Edwards.
3:00 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
(Jan. 12)
3:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (Jan. 8)
4:00 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
"Activity Songs" sung by Marcia Berman.
"Time for Rhyme"— poems read by Bob Ellenstein.
"The Brave Little Tailor" is adapted from the story
by Grimm with music by Mozart in a performance
by the Atlas Theatre Company.
"What's Going On?"
5:00 EDINBURGH FESTIVAL: the Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by John Pritchard,
with Isaac Stern, violin.
HAYDN Symphony No. 95, C minor (18)
BERG Concerto for Violin (24)
RAVEL Alborada del gracioso (8)
WALTON Symphony No. 2 (World Premiere) (27)
6:45 NEWS: Lloyd Reinhart.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Park Chamberlain.
7:15 CHINA PRESS REVIEW: William C. Berges.
7:30 THE TRADE UNION COMES TO AFRICA: Prdf.
Joseph Gordon Oderp-Jowi, Vice Principal of the
African Labor College in Kampala, Uganda, dis-
cusses with Brian Roper the birth of the union
movement, the formation of the first college of its
kind in Africa and the African attitude toward the
East-West and colonialism of all kinds.
8:00 MAN ON EARTH: another in the series devoted
to the Preliminary Evaluation of the Ecology of
Man, by S. P. R. Charter.
8:30 KEYBOARD MUSIC BY HANDEL: performed on
the harpsichord by Paul Wolfe. (EA-0032)
9:00 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: last minute program
arrivals of topical interest.
10:00 NEWS: Edward P. Morgan.
10:15 ARCHIBALD MACLEISH: reads and comments
on his own poetry. Recorded at Monterey Peninsula
College last November.
KPFA Program Folio
Page 9
11:30 THE MEZZOTINT: from "Ghost Stories of an
Antiquary." A tale of the supernatural by M. R.
James, read by Jean Nicholas.
12:00 'ROUND MIDNIGHT: jazz with Jim Cano.
SATURDAY, January 14
9:00 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT
MARCELLO Concerto Grosso, F major, Op. 1, No. 4
(Corelli Society) (HMV 1767) (8)
BLOCH Concerto Grosso
(Pittsburgh Sym-Steinberg) (Festival) (21)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 9, D minor,' Op. 125
(Soloists, Leipzig Choir, Orch— Konwitschny) (Epic
6036) (75)
11:00 PHILOSOPHY, EAST AND WEST: Alan Watts.
(Jan. 8)
11:30 THE PRESIDENT'S PRESS CONFERENCE: via air-
mail from Washington.
12:00 FROM HERE TO SUNDAY: folksongs with Ed
Cray.
1:30 STEVE ALLEN ON PUNISHMENT: Dr. Ralph
Greenson introduces Steve Allen who talks about
his production, "Meeting of Minds," its conception,
its rejection for television, and its final production
for Pacifica. He sets the stage for his personal
bill of particulars against the death penalty. Re-
corded by H. Flint Ranney in cooperation with the
School for Nursery Years.
2:30 THE INTERPRETER: two Senior U. N. Interpreters,
George Sherry and Ted Fagan, tell Jon Donald of
their critical tasks and responsibilities. (Dec. 31)
3:00 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bachman interviews
important film personalities.
3:30 REFORM IN THE U. A. R.: Fuad Omar, cultural
attache with the United* Arab Republic Embassy
in Washington, talks with Gene Marine about some
of the basic reforms that have taken place since
1952 and the U. A. R.'s education system. Arranged
for Pacifica by Ruthe Decker.
4:00 MYTH AND STRUCTURE: THE PERSAE, THE TRA-
CHINIAE, THE ELECTRA OF SOPHOCLES. A rebroad-
cast of the second Sather Lecture by H. D. F. Kitto.
(Nov. 17)
5:00 MISCELLANY
5:15 RECENT RELEASES: new recordings heard in
advance of regular Folio scheduling.
6:45 NEWS: Fred Schott.
7:00 COMMENTARY: Russ Flanagan.
7:15 PRESS REPORTS FROM INDIA: Paul Wallace.
7:30 ORESTES: Euripides' drama, produced for NAEB
by the University of Michigan Broadcasting Service.
Translation is by William Arrowsmith, music by
Don Gillis, directed by Jerry Sandler.
9:15 THE ARCHIVE SERIES: continuing our survey of
this DGG-Decca recording project.
KUHNAU Musical Demonstrations of Biblical Stories
(Three Sonatas) (Uhlenbruch, Neumeyer) (Archive
3095) (42)
10:00 THE KOM-I-AI PEOPLE: recently the survivors,
fewer than 100, of the Kom-i-ai Indian people were
discovered living in a valley near Tecate in Baja,
California. Anthropologist Florence Shipek estimates
they are living as their ancestors did 700 years
ago. Messrs. Peck, Bloom and Radin recorded their
music, attitudes, and an interview with Loretta, the
100-year-old matriarch of the tribe.
10:30 THE CRIES OF LONDON: traditional music of
the street vendors and its use by famous English
composers, with illustrations by the Ambrosian Sing-
ers and Players. (BBC)
11:00 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL: the cries of Gert
Chiarito & Co., in a new extended version.
SUNDAY, January 15
9:00 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT
PURCELL Come Ye Sons of Art
(Deller, Ens-Lewis) (London 50166) (30)
Page 10
KPFA Program Folio
BACH Cantata No. 169, "Gott soil allein mein Herze
haben"
(Soloists, Ens-van aer Horst) (Epic 3683) (29)
BEETHOVEN Quartet No. 13, Bb major, Op. 130
(Budapest Quartet) (Columbia 4584) (38)
HENZE Five Neopolitan Songs
(Fischer-Dieskau, Ens) (DGG 18406) (20)
11:15 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler.
(Jan. 11)
11:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (JAN. 20)
12:00 JAZZ REVIEW: Philip F. ETwood.
1:30 THE HUMAN SPIRIT AND THE SPACE AGE: Ger-
ald C. Brauer, Dean of the Divinity School of the
University of Chicago, speaking in San Francisco
before the University of Chicago Alumni Association.
Recorded by Murray S. Bornstein.
2:05 ARCHBISHOP POIRIER-PRIMATE OF HAITI: Jon
Donald interviews Max Bolte, one of the principal
spokesmen for political exiles of Haiti, immediately
after Archibishop Poirier's expulsion from that coun-
try.
2:30 STRATFORD FESTIVAL, 1960: contemporary music,
performed by the CBC Symphony, with Mary Sim-
mons, soprano, conducted by Walter Susskind.
TAKTAKISHVILI Mtsyri (21)
ANHALT Symphony No. 1 (23)
WEINZWEIG Wine of Peace (17)
MESSIAEN Les Offrandes Oubliees (7)
RIEGGER Music for Orchestra, Op. 50 (6)
4:00 PROSPECTS OF THE FREE SOCIETY: Robert M.
Hutchins, educator, author and president of the
Fund for the Republic, Inc., speaks about the future:
education, intellectual climate, automation, leisure,
and conformity. Recorded by Alex Vanderkar at
the First Unitarian Church in Los Angeles.
5:05 ANNA LIVIA PLURABELLE: read by the author,
James Joyce.
5:30 MARXISM, HUMANISM AND FREEDOM: an ar-
gumentative discussion between Trevor Thomas and
Raya Dunayevskaya, one-time secretary to Leon
Trotsky and author of "Marxism and Freedom . . .
From 1776 Until Today." Mrs. Dunayevskaya broke
with Trotsky just before World War II and now
describes herself as a Marxist-humanist.
6:00 NEWS REVIEW: Bill Plosser.
6:15 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (JAN. 18)
CORELLI Sonata in A, Op. 3, No. 12
(Musicorum Arcadia) (Vox) (9)
CARISSIMI "Historia di Abraham et Isaac"
(Soloists, Orch— Lupi) (Angelicum) (16)
SERINI Sonata, Bb
(Linde, harps) (MIA) (7)
VIOTTI Sinfonia Concertante No. 2
(Pignatelli, Ceradini, Orch— Janes) (Angelicum)
(16)
ROSSINI "La Promessa"
(Tebaldi) (Lon)
RESPIGHI Antiche Danze ed Arie, Series 3
(Angelicum Orch— Janes) (18)
7:45 COMENTARY: Mulford Sibley. (JAN. 16)
8:00 PHILOSOPHY, EAST AND WEST: Alan Watts.
(JAN. 21)
8:30 A LOOK AT THE AFRICAN: Dr. Philip Gulliver,
anthropologist at Boston University and a former
resident of Africa, discusses with Brian Roper the
complex tribal and social systems, outside influences
and the possibilities of future stability in Africa.
9:00 SONGS BY SCHUMANN: from the "Spanisches
Liederspiel," Opus 74, performed by Use Wolf,
Janet Baker, David Galliver and Bruce Boyce with
Ernest Lush, piano.
9:30 LOVE: continuing our rebroadcasts of the series
by Dr. C. S. Lewis, made available through the
Episcopal Diocese of California.
10:00 HOW TO BUY A HOUSE: from "Bitter Lemons,"
by Lawrence Durrell. A Cyprus landscape and adven-
tures in making a deal, read by Jean Nicholas.
11:00 MOZART'S REQUIEM IN D MINOR: K. No. 626,
the composer's last work, which was unfinished
at the time of his death. This performance is by
Teresa Stich-Randall, Waldemar Kmentt, Ira Malan-
iuk, Kurt Boehme, and the Vienna State Opera
Choir and Symphony, conducted by Karl Boehm.
(Epic 3507)
FOLIO CLASSIFIED
(Continued from Page 2)
CERAMICS
Ceramic tile. New or remodel "Durable
LA 6-3117, Evenings.
DANCE
Peters Wright Creative Dance:
Lenore Peters Job— Judy Job.
2695 Sacramento St., San Francisco. WA. 1-1365
MODERN DANCE CENTER
(Martha Graham technique). Graded classes for children
and adults. Faculty: Victor Anderson and Frank Shawl.
3:79 College at Alcatraz. OL 4-5921.
MARY GARLAND DANCE: Techniques of teaching,-
classes for gifted children,- repertoire for artists, stu-
dents. Classes forming for spring semester. Berkeley
Studio, phone TH 8-8892.
DIRECT IMPORTS
"A layin' hen is better than a standin' mill"— (an old
Scots proverb meaning, "a small useful thing is better
than a great useless one). Aye, indexed, and ye'll find
many delightfully useful and appropriate things at
Scottish Imports Ltd., 374 Geary St., San Francisco.
Open 'til 8:30.
colorful adventure
for the primitive
minded
VILLAGE FAIR MEZZANINE • SAUSALITO
ED 2-3115
PRIMITIVE *»T CRAFTS
FM AND HI-FI SERVICE
ALIGNMENT, REPAIR, INSTALLATION: FM, record
changers; everything electronic except TV and missiles.
RADIO ETC! SKyline 1-1772. 2765 McAllister St., S. F.
INSTRUCTION
CAN YOUR CHILD REALLY READ? "Pretty good" is
not good enough. Our records, books, and games wiH
help Write for free information and test. LlblbN ANLJ
LEARN WITH PHONICS, 3746 Park Blvd. Way, Oakland
1*0, California. KEIlog 3-1456.
MOSAICS
CREATIVE MERCHANDISERS, 1821 FOURTH STREET, SAN
RAFAEL. Largest variety of Mosaic material in Northern
California. Unusual materials and tools for craftswork,
sculpture, ceramics, etc. Ideas, design, consultation.
GL. 3-7346.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Fine old Guitars, Banjos, Mandolins. Strings, accessories,
repair. Jon and Deidre Lundberg, 2186 Dwight Way,
Berkeley. TH 8-6519.
FIVE-STRING BANJOS: S. S. Stewart $60 Washburn
$60 Old American $45, Antique Fretless $40, English
Banio $50, Good Harmony $35. Also Guitars, Zithers,
other Folk instruments. Formerly "The Barrel Folk Music
Center"— Barry Olivier — TH 8-3856.
MUSIC TRAINING
Folk Guitar for Children: Susie TH 1-6313, Ext. 303
Cheney.
MUSIC TRAINING
Piano Lessons, beginning through advanced, by Dwight
Peltzer, artist-teacher. TH 5-2590.
ANNA GOLD, pianist and teacher. Associate artist
with Zarenelsova. Beginners and advanced students.
907 Oxford. LA 6-3825.
NATURAL FOODS
NATURALLY GROWN FOODS; including fresh produce,
raw milk, fresh frozen juices, dried fruits, whole grain
bread, meat - ALL-NATURAL FOODS SOCIETY, (co-
operative) for membership information — TH 8-4269,
LA 6-8354.
NURSERY SCHOOL
For your pre-school child, a program of creative activity
and outdoor play at Sunset Cooperative Nursery. For
information, call MO 4-7579.
PAINTING
Ward Bros. Peninsula Painting offers qualified, de-
pendable service. We paint to please. Winter rates,
terms. Will take large jobs outside Peninsula. Call
John, UNion 7-3673 or BILL, EM. 9-6652.
PORTABLE FM-AM
Enjoy FM at work and play— Special to KPFA SUB-
SCRIBERS AND NEW LISTENERS: Portable, transistor,
FM-AM plus one-year subscription or renewal, only
$97.50. HOLMES HI-FI, LYtell 3-8184. _
PLAY FM IN YOUR CAR-Portable, transistorized FM/AM
and short wave radios from Germany. Special price
to FOLIO readers $94.95. Also stereo consoles. ALTIERI
IMPORTS of the World, 162 University Ave., Palo Alto
DAvenport 6-3521.
REAL ESTATE
WALBURN REALTY, advocate of KPFA, serving families
seeking homes in Southern Marin County. Member of
Multiple Listing Service. 90 E. Blithedale Avenue, Mill
Valley, California. DU 8-5772.
KPFA SPOKEN HERE! To buy or sell (a home, lot or
income property) TUNE IN with us. TEPPING REALTY
CO. El Cerrito and Berkeley offices. LA. 6-5353.
READY TO SELL? Why not list with an active, inter-
racial, office that believes in integrated neighborhoods.
Call and let's talk. Central Realty Service, Arlene
Slaughter. PL 8-2177. KE 4-1531, evenings.
Builder has several new 3-bedroom, 2-bath homes with
large rumpus rooms, 2 fireplaces, bay views, in at-
tractive locations. If we do not have what you want
we will build it for you or help you find it. Mr.
Kasten, OL 4-0104.
RECORDING ^^^^^^
Mono and stereo recording services at reasonable prices.
L. P. discs from tapes and vice versa. 78 rpm's dubbed
on tape or L. P. Air checks. Wernham, 2951 Washington
Street, S. F. WA 1-1700 or. GA 1-1322.
KPFA Program Folio
Page 11
Complete recording facilities. Disc and tape - echo
chamber. Sierra Sound Laboratories, 1741 Alcatraz Ave.
OL 5-2767.
RECORDS
A 12-inch L.P. made from tapes of the hearings of the
House Unamerican Activities Committee and the demon-
stration against it in San Frandisco in May of this
year. Available at $2.00 each or 3 for $5.00 from
SLATE, P. O. Box 893, Berkeley 1. See ad in Folio
No. 18.
RELIGION
Ethical Culture invites intelligent consideration of mod-
ern man's needs, problems, potential. Those seeking
non-traditional approaches to religious values and as-
sociation, inquire about the new Bay Area Fellowship
of this 84-year-old movement: Mrs. John R. Rognas,
2340 Le Conte St., Berkeley 9. TH 3-2492.
RESORT
Are you looking for that "quiet little Inn"? Come to
HARBOR HOUSE on the spectacular Mendocino Coast.
A rural, restful experience will be yours. Private beach
—good food— fireplaces and private baths in every
room. Rates from $12.00 per day, include breakfast
and dinner. Write for information: HARBOR HOUSE
Rt. 1, Elk (Mendocino County), California.
SCULPTURE
Commission a sculpture' for your landscape. Roger
Stuart, 2045 University. (B)
TRAVEL
Combine your Mexican Vacation with Adventure! For
booklet of itineraries into areas still untouched by
tourists, write Off The Beaten Track Tours, 429 VVinslow,
Long Beach 14, Calif.
TYPING
Manuscripts; theses,- architectural; other. Excellent ref-
erences. Barbara Wood. KLondike 2-2523.
WATCH REPAIRING
Expert, prompt, guaranteed service. Estimates free.
Charges made only for repairs needed. Join my satis-
fied customers. ALEX IVANCICH, WATCHMAKER, 1712
Grove, Berkeley. TH 8-4269.
WATCH, JEWELERY SERVICE AND SALES
10% of all business done with KPFA aficionados donat-
ed to KPFA. Top craftsmanship, fair prices. Harold
Shapiro, 210 Post, S.F., SU. 1-2524.
36 YEARS EXPERIENCE
WINES AND ACCESSORIES
Stocking a fine selection of imported and domestic
wines. Joseph's Liquors, 1882 Solano, Berkeley, Op-
posite Oaks Theater. LA. 6-1722. Member of Diner's
Club, Carte Blanche, Bankamericard.
;0^"S^
iltAfl?AflYAfl^fly7 Yfly7^lty^lf?^lTySTlt?
mem
NOTES . . .
THE COVER is Beniamino Bufano's "St. Francis of Assisi," photographed
by Ernest Lowe.
NEXT FOLIO we return to 16 pages — which means room for program |j
highlight boxes, notes and comment, and other interesting things.
pACIFICA
I RADIO
2207 SHATTUCK AVE., BERKELEY, CALIF.
Postmaster: If addressee has removed, notify sender
on Form 3547, postage for which is guaranteed.
DATED
PROGRAM
© 1961 Pacifica Foundation
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
BERKELEY, CALIF.
Permit No. 219
Mrs. Ralph W« YJeilerstein.
1080 Miller Ave.
Berkeley 8, Calif,
a good new year's resolution —
guy's drug stores for all your prescriptions!
GUTS DRUG STORES
prescription center of the east bay
OPENING FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 8:30 P.M.
THE INTERPLAYERS— Bella Union Theatre, Kearny near Washington, S. F.
presents
Angela and Robert Goldsby's translation of
LET'S GET A . DIVORCE!
by
Victorien Sardou and Emi'e de Najac
Directed by Leon Forbes
RESERVATIONS: SU 1-9909